NIH Public Access Policy: Details for MIT Authors
On January 11, 2008, the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) adopted a revised—and now mandatory—Public Access Policy that requires all NIH-funded investigators to submit their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts to the NIH’s PubMed Central (PMC) database (the digital archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature) upon acceptance for journal publication.
Compliance with the policy is a term and condition of all grants and cooperative agreements active in Fiscal Year 2008 or beyond, and for all contracts awarded after April 7, 2008.
The new policy implements a Congressional statutory directive under which:
The Director of the [NIH] shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to [PMC] an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.
NIH has now revised its home page, FAQ, and Public Access Policy, describing the new mandatory submission process.
An overview for members of the MIT community who receive funds from NIH:
- Step by Step Guide for Complying
- Timing and Grants Affected
- Publisher Agreements and Copyright
- Submitting to PubMed Central
- PubMed Central Reference Numbers
- Publication Costs
- Compliance Flowchart
Step by Step Guide for Complying With the NIH Public Access Policy
Timing and Grants Affected
- The policy applies to all peer-reviewed journal articles that are accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008.
- The policy applies to articles based on work funded by an NIH grant or cooperative agreement active in FY08 (10/1/07-9/30/08) or beyond; and articles based on work funded by an NIH contract signed on or after April 7, 2008.
- Principal Investigators and their institutions are responsible for ensuring that articles that arise directly from their awards, even if the PI is not an author or co-author, are submitted to PubMed Central in accordance with the policy.
Publisher Agreements and Copyright
- It is essential for authors to ensure that any publication agreement they sign allows the final, peer-reviewed manuscript to be submitted to PubMed Central in accordance with the policy.
- From the NIH FAQ: “Authors should avoid signing any agreements with publishers that do not allow the author to comply with the NIH Public Access Policy.”
- If a journal presents an author with a copyright transfer agreement, the author should not sign it if it does not allow the author to submit the final, peer-reviewed manuscript to PubMed Central within 12 months of the publication date.
- Authors should attach an amendment to the publisher’s transfer agreement that will allow them to comply with NIH requirements. See the Step by Step Guide for details.
- Submitting to PMC is required even if you publish in an open access journal, or if the article is freely accessible on the publisher’s website.
- The author’s requirements related to submission depend on which journal the author is publishing in: See the Step by Step Guide for details.
Submitting to PubMed Central
PubMed Central Reference Numbers
- Authors and PIs should be begin collecting PubMed Central reference numbers as well as NIH Manuscript Submission System reference numbers as proof of deposit. As of May 25, 2008, these numbers will be required in all progress reports, proposals, and grant applications when citing papers that arose from your NIH award.
- NIH Manuscript Submission System Reference numbers (NIHMS IDs) will be supplied to authors via email from the NIHMS system, when they are asked to approve the submission and release of the manuscript. These will be important to use as references prior to the point that the article appears publicly in PMC.
- If the publisher partners with PMC, no NIHMS ID will be created. Authors should instead reference the PMCID, but this will be available only if the article is publicly visible in PMC (see next bullet). For articles published by partner publishers which are not yet publicly visible in PMC, authors should indicate “the PMC ID is not yet available.” (New instructions for this situation are expected in late April or May 2008.)
- PubMedCentral Reference Numbers (PMCIDs) can be found in three ways:
- By searching PubMed and looking at the end of the abstract.
- By searching PubMed Central and looking at the end of the citation, if the article is publicly available.
- By searching PubMed Central and looking near the top of the fulltext of the article, if the article is publicly available.
Publication Costs
- NIH will allow PIs to pay open access publication costs from grant funds, though NIH is not budgeting additional funds for this purpose.
- See the Step by Step Guide for details.
Compliance Flowchart [from Washington University]
- Washington University in St. Louis Medical Library has prepared a flowchart: “Complying with the Revised NIH Public Access Policy.”
For further information please contact:
Ellen Finnie Duranceau / Scholarly Publishing & Licensing Consultant / MIT Libraries / x38483 / efinnie@mit.edu